This section looks at the stories of old, sometimes called myths and sometimes called legends.

Introduction

The traditional Maori world is an oral culture.

Other cultures, due to the fact that they place emphasis on the written word, often dismiss Maori oral traditions as it was not written down.

One of the main arguments against the reliability of oral traditions is the "Chinese Whisper" theory, which works as follows:

A group of people sit in a circle. The first person whispers a phrase to the person on their side, who in turns whispers to the next person and so forth around the whole circle until it gets back to the original person. There is a very high possibility that the phrase has changed.

Those who argue against the accuracy of oral traditions say that this proves that things change.

However, what these people fail to acknowledge is that oral traditions are not whispered once to a person. It takes years of training and reciting to gain the position of historian. The memory is trained to be able to recall acurately the histories, traditions and genealogies verbatim.